Loved it! A lot of rewilding videos are a bit samey, this wasn't. I loved the bit about tearing things down then thinking a few nest boxes can compensate, absolutely spot on!
A well made film with some lovely footage. More important than ever to teach people about the importance of healthy, properly functioning ecosystems. Great job - subscribed!
Well,.. it was well intentioned, there was some good filming, and some truth behind what was said. I don't want to be harshly critical of an amateur effort, I'll leave it at that. (Forest dweller since 1980, here.)
Well intentioned but lots of visual, audio and factual mistakes. If you want to be taken seriously, these have to be correct, otherwise you’re miseducating those that know no different. Great camera work 👍
You let yourself down with poor research, for example the deer you show are Fallow deer( Dama dama), but you label them as Roe deer. You say that Lesser Horseshoe bats emerge from their roosts to forage for vegetation ! They are insectivorous, like all our native bats. It’s an interesting film, and I enjoyed watching it, but by including such glaring errors you are loading your critic’s guns for them ! Find yourself a good editor, or some expert advisers.
I appreciate this comment. This was my first piece of wildlife documentary I'd ever made. My more recent ones aren't as high budget, but the research is absolutely solid. I would love to know what you think of the Boar or Squirrel film?
Thank you
Well done! Amazing film covering some very important topics. Thank you for sharing Craig! - Cheers, Duarte
enjoyed watching it! lot of good topics covered!
Loved it! A lot of rewilding videos are a bit samey, this wasn't. I loved the bit about tearing things down then thinking a few nest boxes can compensate, absolutely spot on!
Oh thank you mate I really appreciate your kind words
Only the truth. A lot of rewilding videos are indeed perfectly fine, but a bit saccharin this was different and edgier.@@wildcamcraig
A well made film with some lovely footage. More important than ever to teach people about the importance of healthy, properly functioning ecosystems. Great job - subscribed!
Thank you so much mate!
Genuinely impressed mate. Well done
Excellent film with an important message - no factual errors and looks very professional.
I'm over the moon that you enjoyed our work - thank you Steve
There are factual errors.
Sir what are they?
@@wildcamcraig I have sent you an email as requested in the above comments to open a dialogue.
I replied to your email and you didn't give me any examples of errors. I'm here, I'm listening
Excellent, well done.
this was great!
Man shouldn't interfere with nature, especially creating concrete dams.
the draining of wetlands had always been bad for the environment. the wetlands regulate the local climate and prevent wildfire amongstother things.
We love kais
Well,.. it was well intentioned, there was some good filming, and some truth behind what was said. I don't want to be harshly critical of an amateur effort, I'll leave it at that. (Forest dweller since 1980, here.)
no don't worry about it - would love to hear your input
5:18 - what did you say
there are closed captions available my friend
😍👏
Well intentioned but lots of visual, audio and factual mistakes. If you want to be taken seriously, these have to be correct, otherwise you’re miseducating those that know no different. Great camera work 👍
would you mind shooting me an email so we can chat further about this? Thank you craigbakerphotography@gmail.com
Email sent
I would too love to hear your examples of Visual, Audio and Factual errors in this beautiful documentary.
@@jonxdavies I will discuss them with @FloraFaunaProductions first. I’ve sent an email just waiting for a reply.
You let yourself down with poor research, for example the deer you show are Fallow deer( Dama dama), but you label them as Roe deer. You say that Lesser Horseshoe bats emerge from their roosts to forage for vegetation ! They are insectivorous, like all our native bats. It’s an interesting film, and I enjoyed watching it, but by including such glaring errors you are loading your critic’s guns for them !
Find yourself a good editor, or some expert advisers.
I appreciate this comment. This was my first piece of wildlife documentary I'd ever made. My more recent ones aren't as high budget, but the research is absolutely solid. I would love to know what you think of the Boar or Squirrel film?